Sierra magazine has named the University of California, Davis, the nation’s “” for its efforts to address climate change and operate sustainably.
The 5,300-acre campus, internationally acclaimed for its research in environmental sciences, ranked No. 1 among the 96 top colleges and universities surveyed.
“At ϲϿ Davis, sustainability is one of our core values,” said ϲϿ Davis chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi. “I am very proud of the students, faculty and staff who have worked so hard to make this achievement possible and to invest in a more sustainable future for our campus.”
In bestowing the “Coolest School” ranking, the Sierra Club’s official publication praised ϲϿ Davis for establishing rigorous green purchasing standards; diverting nearly 70 percent of campus trash from landfills; and offering an extensive transportation system that includes the student-run Unitrans bus service, which serves the campus and adjoining city with 49 natural-gas-powered buses that carry 21,000 riders a day, 42 miles of bike paths and more than 20,000 bicycle parking spaces.
“I’m going into my senior year, and for the past few years, I’ve seen ϲϿ Davis grow in efforts to put sustainably grown food and energy measures on campus,“ said ϲϿ Davis student Tessa Artale, director of the Campus Center for the Environment. “Not only at the administrative level, but at the student level, I've seen a commitment to making ϲϿ Davis a model for green universities. At ϲϿ Davis, you can take a class about sustainability, you can go on a field trip with the professor, join a club, get involved in the Student Farm. Sustainability is a really important topic, and ϲϿ Davis is a good place to learn about it. “
ϲϿ Davis drew international attention for its commitment to sustainability last fall, when it officially opened the doors to , the nation’s largest planned zero net energy community. The 130-acre development, which will house about 3,000 students, faculty and staff, is designed to generate as much electricity as it uses over the course of a year.
ϲϿ Davis has also established itself as a leader in environmental sustainability through:
- A that has reduced campus greenhouse gas emissions below year 2000 levels and expects to reach year 1990 levels by 2020.
- A $39 million Smart Lighting Initiative that is on track to reduce campus lighting electrical use by 60 percent by 2015, saving $3 million on the annual electricity bill. In June, ϲϿ Davis became the first campus in the nation to introduce adaptive, networked exterior lighting, a project that alone will save $100,000 annually in electricity costs.
- Planning that helps 85 percent of students and 46 percent of employees to use sustainable transportation (walking, bicycling, carpooling, riding a bus or taking a train) as their primary means of commuting to and getting around on campus.
- Aggressive recycling, composting and reuse efforts that in 2011 prevented 64 percent of campus waste from entering landfills annually. Aggie Stadium has won the EPA’s Wastewise Game Day Challenge diversion rate championship for the past two years. In 2011, the stadium diverted more than 93 percent of its waste on challenge day. Throughout the year, the stadium prevents about 80 percent of its waste from entering landfills.
- The campus spends more than 20 percent of its $5.6 million food budget for residential dining services on local products, buys organic items such as poultry and grains, and sources olive oil and tomatoes from campus farms.
Visitors to campus can take a self-guided tour of these and other sustainability highlights by downloading a or obtaining a print version on campus. A website, , launched in 2009 to celebrate ϲϿ Davis’ first 100 years, also catalogues sustainable achievements.
In another major initiative, ϲϿ Davis is taking the principles of its -- ranked one of the 10 most beautiful gardens in the U.S. by Stylist Home -- to transition the 900-acre central campus into a public garden that features sustainable maintenance practices and native plants.
Four ϲϿ Davis building complexes are certified , the highest ranking awarded by the U.S. Green Building Council and more than any other ϲϿ campus. Among them is the world’s first LEED Platinum , in which a new generation of students is learning to produce fine wine, beer and food using less water and electricity. When the Graduate School of Management's and adjacent conference center earned LEED Platinum, it became the first business school in California to achieve the ranking. Also certified LEED Platinum are the School of Veterinary Medicine’s and the .
In addition:
- ϲϿ Davis research informs state water, transportation, lighting, construction, and air quality policies, which often influence national policy.
- ϲϿ Davis is the home base of Andrew Frank, hailed as the “father of the plug-in hybrid.” The longtime professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering built the first commercially viable plug-in hybrid.
“Over the last six years, Sierra has been privileged to connect with and learn from traditional institutions evolving in nontraditional ways,” said Bob Sipchen, Sierra magazine’s editor-in-chief. “With their ever-growing emphasis on environmental responsibility, these schools are channeling the enthusiasm of their students, who consistently cite climate disruption and other environmental issues as the most serious challenges their generation must confront, while demonstrating leadership for other civic institutions.”
Sierra Magazine’s top 10 schools of 2012 are:
1. University of California, Davis (Davis, Calif.)
2. Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, Ga.)
3. Stanford University (Stanford, Calif.)
4. University of Washington (Seattle, Wash.)
5. University of Connecticut (Hartford, Conn.)
6. University of New Hampshire (Durham, N.H.)
7. Duke University (Durham, N.C.)
8. Yale University (New Haven, Conn.)
9. University of California, Irvine (Irvine, Calif)
10. Appalachian State University (Boone, N.C.)
Media Resources
Kat Kerlin, Research news (emphasis on environmental sciences), 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu